DOMAIN
Media & Narrative
Analysis examining how framing, repetition, and language shape international expectations, responsibility assignment, and interpretive consensus.
-
DB-031 How Advocacy Ecosystems Shape Perceived State Behavior
The synchronization of external interpretation and the consensus engine This article explains how non-governmental organizations, international media, and multilateral institutions interact to stabilize a dominant…
-
DB-030 The Difference Between Sovereignty as Law and Sovereignty as Narrative
The erosion of state control over the interpretation of its own actions This article explains how a state can retain absolute legal authority over its…
-
DB-027 How International Reports Become De Facto Reference Points
The stabilization of narrative and the architecture of citation This article explains how non-binding external reports stabilize as authoritative anchors across media, institutions, and advocacy…
-
DB-025 The Role of Repetition in Creating “Established International Standards”
The fabrication of consensus through citation networks This article explains how non-binding standards gain interpretive authority through circulation and citation alone, independent of legal codification.…
-
DB-024 How Language Converts Policy Preference Into Moral Obligation
Normative Conversion and the linguistic shift This article explains how descriptive or advisory language is systematically transformed into moral and quasi-legal expectation. This operates through…